Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Crime Alert. I'm Nancy Grace breaking crime needs now. A
group of Georgia teens repeatedly knock on William Coule's door
for a ding dong ditch Pranke. Fed up with the antics,
Cole chases the teens away from his home, but follows
them in his car, trying to hit them. Cole starts
pursuing the teens on foot, again, putting one of the
teens in a headlock, choking the boy until bystanders intervene Nancy.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
After bystanders separate Coal from the teen, the forty nine
year old flees the scene and doesn't return home. Cops
encourage locals to call them if they cross paths with Coal,
and eventually arrest him during a traffic stop. None of
the teens were seriously injured by Cole's attempts to hurt them.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Cole, forty nine, charged with felony, agassault, and cruelty to children.
Ed Rodriguez steps into a Florida waffle house with guns drawn.
Finger guns, that is, He shouts at customers and staff
to get on the ground, announcing this is a robbery.
Keeping his finger guns pointed, he walks up to the counter,
(01:01):
grabs a handful of napkins and calmly leaves comps to
recognize the description of Rodriguez and find him at home,
where he admits to the napkin robbery. Is now charged
with unarmed robbery and assault. Really more crime and justice
needs after this. Now with the latest crime in justice
(01:24):
breaking these Crime Online.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
John Lemley, a Philadelphia police officer who fatally shot a driver,
has now surrendered and been charged with murder in connection
with the man's debt. This as prosecutors reveal graphic bodycam
footage of the deadly altercation. Here's Sidney Sumner with Crime Online.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Officer Mark Dial was charged on four counts of official oppression, murder,
and voluntary manslaughter after turning himself in in response to
a criminal warrant. Dial's attorney claims that the shooting was warranted,
shuting that the officer believed twenty seven year old Eddie
Irrazari was armed. The deadly shooting was captured on police
bodycam video, in which Dial can be seen firing his
(02:03):
gun at close range through the rolled up driver's side
window of Irazari's vehicle on August fourteenth. According to the video,
Dial shot Rozari roughly seven seconds after stepping out of
a police suv and walking close to Irazari's car, Dial
fired six bullets in total. Authorities have stated that after
seeing Irazari's car being driven erradically, officers followed the driver
(02:25):
for several blocks. The driver then stopped after making a
wrong way turn down a one way street. The police
department withdrew its initial assertion that the officer shot a
person outside the car after he quote lunged at them
with a knife during a traffic check. A review of
the officer's body worn cameras, according to outgoing police Commissioner
Danielle Outlaw, quote made it very clear that what we
(02:47):
initially reported was not actually what happened.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
Dial is scheduled to appear in court later this month
for a preliminary hearing on the accusations, and was released
after posting five hundred thousand dollars bail. The police union
acknowledged that it contributed ten percent of the bail to
get Dial released. The man suspected of fatally shooting three
University of Virginia football players last year is now facing
(03:12):
upgraded murder charges. Christopher Darnell Jones Junior was charged with
two additional counts of aggravated murder by a special grand
jury in Charlottesville. The twenty three year old would be
sentenced to life in prison if found guilty. After Virginia
eliminated the death penalty in twenty twenty one, These are
the most serious murder charges that can be brought. In
(03:34):
November twenty twenty two, Jones was a UVA student and
a former player on the football team, according to authorities,
when he allegedly started shooting at a charter bus returning
from a field trip. Three former deputy jailers at a
facility in eastern Kentucky have each received prison sentences in
connection with the death of an inmate once Again Crime
(03:56):
Online Sidney Sumner.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
Following a settlement agreement, Boney Circuit Judge George Davis announced
the penalties for Jeremy Maddox, Colton Griffith, and Zachary Messer.
The three were among five former deputies who were charged
after forty year old Michael L. Moore was found dead
in a restraint chair at the jail in November twenty eighteen.
According to the authorities, Moore was intoxicated when the officers
(04:19):
purposefully mistreated him or knowingly allowed that mistreatment to occur.
Official Seymore died as a result of the incident. Messer
received a twenty year sentence on accusations of first degree
criminal abuse, second degree criminal abuse in facilitation to manslaughter.
Maddox received a five year term for criminal abuse, while
Griffith received a six year sentence. While their attorneys read
(04:41):
statements from the defendants expressing regret for their actions, they
also contended that the former deputies were undertrained and worked
in a jail that was operated inefficiently, saying the facility
had experienced a spike in unrest prior to the murder,
including a riot, overdoses and escapes. Five days after Moore's death,
the jailer at the time resigned.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
Two further defendants in the case have already received sentences.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Jarrett Brooks, sixteen, grounded after breaking his dad's four wheeler
on their Arizona farm early that morning. He asked his
parents if his grounding means he's not allowed to attend
festivities in town, and they confirm he should stay home.
The Brooks family returns from a parade to find him gone,
his belongings left behind. Neighbors reports seeing Jarrett walk past
(05:29):
their property, disappearing into the fields. Jarrett Brooks now missing
over two months. If you have information on teen boy
Jarrett brooks disappearance, please contact Navajo County Sheriffs nine two
eight five two four forty fifty. There's a fifty thousand
dollar reward for info leading to Jarrett's safe return. For
(05:53):
the latest crime in justice news, go to crimeonline dot
com with this crime alert. I'm Nancy Grace.